Guardian of the Galaxy’s Awesome Mix in Vol 2: ELO, Glen Campbell, Cat Stevens

Posted on May 5, 2017 at 8:00 am

Like the first “Guardians of the Galaxy,” Vol 2. has a fabulous soundtrack of 70’s songs.

Electric Light Orchestra – Mister Blue Sky

Already on the soundtrack of films from “The Game Plan” to “Paul Blart: Mall Cop,” “Role Models,” “Wild Mussels,” “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” “The Magic Roundabout,” “The Game Plan,” “Martian Child,” “The Invention of Lying,” “Megamind,” and “Battle of the Year” as well as the television shows “Doctor Who,” “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation,” “American Dad!,” “Divorce,” “Revolution,” and “Waterloo Road,” this song kicks off “Guardians 2” with an adorable Baby Groot dance in the middle of a fight with a giant space monster.

Sweet – Fox on the Run

Most recently heard on the soundtracks of “Dazed and Confused” and “Detroit Rock City,” this 1974 song about groupies by the British band Sweet has been covered by many performers, including KISS’s Ace Frehley and the Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Aliotta Haynes Jeremiah – Lake Shore Drive

This 1971 song is a tribute to Chicago’s famous road along Lake Michigan.

Fleetwood Mac – The Chain

Credited to all five members of the band, reportedly this 1977 song was literally spliced together on tape from pieces they were working on.

Sam Cooke – Bring it on Home to Me

Lou Rawls sings back-up in this romantic Sam Cooke classic.

Glen Campbell – Southern Nights

One of my favorite Glen Campbell songs, this Allen Toussaint composition from 1977 features a guitar lick from Jerry Reed.

George Harrison – My Sweet Lord

One of the ex-Beatle’s biggest solo hits is this deeply spiritual song calling for unity between people and between individuals and God.

Looking Glass – Brandy (You’re a Fine Girl)

Here’s the story behind the 1972 hit that plays an important part in the film.

Jay & The Americans – Come a Little Bit Closer

Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart with Wes Farrell wrote this classic story song about a flirtatious barmaid.

Sliver – Wham Bam Shang-a-Lang

This one-hit wonder sounds like the essence of the 70’s.

Cheap Trick – Surrender

Band member Rick Nielsen said: “When I wrote the song, the ‘we’re all alright’ was originally only intended to refer to the four of us; that’s why it comes right after the ‘Bun-E/Tom/Robin/Rick’s alright’ section. After we started playing it live however, I came to realize that, to our audience, it was inclusive of all of us – our generation; that we’re ALL alright, we survived the 60s & Vietnam & Nixon & everything, and we’re all still here, playing music and having fun. That’s when we started playing with it a little in concert; I’ll tell ya, you get 50 – 60 thousand people screaming ‘WE’RE ALL ALRIGHT!’ in unison, that’s a pretty positive affirmation!”

Cat Stevens – Father and Son

Like “Surrender,” this is a 70’s-era song about the conflict between baby boomer teenagers and their Greatest Generation parents.

Parliament – Flash Light

The essence of 70’s funk, this song by George Clinton, Bernie Worrell, and Bootsy Collins was also on the soundtrack of “Set it Off” and “Roll Bounce.”

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Music

Contest: Begin Again Soundtrack

Posted on October 28, 2014 at 10:28 am

Copyright 2014 222 Records
Copyright 2014 222 Records

In honor of this week’s release on DVD/Blu-Ray of the sweet romantic film Begin Again, starring Keira Knightley, Mark Ruffalo, and Maroon 5’s Adam Levine, I am giving away a copy of the movie’s terrific soundtrack.

Send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com and tell me your favorite pop song. Don’t forget your address! (U.S. addresses only). I’ll pick a winner at random on November 1, 2014. Good luck!

Reminder: My policy on conflicts

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Listen to the Folk Soundtrack of the New Coen Brothers Movie: Inside Llewyn Davis

Posted on November 5, 2013 at 12:00 pm

This magnificent soundtrack was produced by T. Bone Burnett, who also did “Oh Brother Where Art Thou?”  It is set in the early 1960’s folk music scene and features Oscar Isaac, Justin Timberlake. Marcus Mumford, “Girls'” Adam Driver, and Bob Dylan singing classics like “500 Miles,” “The Auld Triangle,” “Hang  Me, Oh Hang Me” and Tom Paxton’s “The Last Thing on My Mind.”

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Music

Interview: Composer Dominic Lewis of “Free Birds”

Posted on November 1, 2013 at 7:00 am

“Free Birds,” an animated film opening today, stars Owen Wilson, Amy Poehler, and Woody Harrelson.  And it has a great score by composer Dominic Lewis available on iTunes.  He talked to me about what it was like to write music for a movie about time-traveling turkeys.

You could hardly have set yourself a more complicated challenge because you had science fiction element, history, comedy, and even romance.  How do you begin to approach something like that?

I always watch a movie a few times before embarking on trying to come up with stuff that works.  And I guess the great thing about it was that Jimmy gave me free reign.  You know, it was a blank canvass.  And he basically said “Do your thing.” And the lovely thing about the movie is it’s so fast-paced, I got a chance to explore all those different genres of music and it’s not just all those one thing.  But I’d like to think that they’re going to take together in some shape or form.  So it’s really great to be able to not just be in one box, which is what’s so great about animations is that you’re allowed to speak completely freely at whatever you’re doing to express yourself.

Is it different to score for animation that it is for live action? Free-birds-movie-500x332

Oh, hugely, yeah.   I mean the thing with live action is that everything needs to be modern and visual.   So gone are the days of being able to really pull from classical composers such as a lot of Stravinski and Chopin was used back in the day. With animation, it’s just a really great opportunity to be able to pull all your tricks out the box and really write.  Whilst in live action and not negatively at all, but there are boxes that you need to tick.  But it’s the animation that’s definitely freer which I love.  It’s just lovely to do that.

I’m a little interested to hear that you saw the film before you started writing the score.  So at what point did you get involved with the project?

Well music is the last thing to go in.  I got involved, I guess I’d say, slightly before a composer would normally would come on which is nice because I saw the whole thing evolve from storyboards all the way through to its finished product now.  That’s been a really cool journey.  But yeah, I mean music is the last thing to go on so the film is able to be watched and you need to be able to see the whole thing down and ideas if they’re going to work with the whole thing.  So that’s the normal process.  And I guess, from then on, it was a question of coming up with scenes based on the images.  I had meetings with Jimmy about what he wanted and so we kind of went from there really.

And does the theme of time travel pose any particular challenges?

It has to be in the realm of the sci-fi world which is nice.  I got to use a lot of space-like sounds and electronic stuff with time travel.  It was a nice challenge.  It was a really good challenge to me to get my hands dirty with that one and trying to come up with something that works.

What was the first film you worked on?

I did my first movie in about 2007.  In the US, it was called “Hearts of War.”  Everywhere else, it was called “The Poet” and that was directed by Damian Lee.   Before that, Rupert Gregson-Williams sort of took me under his wings when I was 15, 16 so I would go down to Rupert’s studio and watch him working and do a few vocal things for him, and he’d leave to make a cup of tea, and he’d say just tell me to play around with the samples and get a feel of his stuff.  So a teenager, I was in and amongst the world of film music.  Plus my father is a cellist and plays on all the movie soundtracks and pop stuff in London.  So I was brought up with this stuff.  We had work experience at school.  When you’re 14, 15 you’re shoved into a workplace to see what you want to do.  And I was lucky enough to go to work with my dad. I just fell in love with it.  It was from then on, it was like “I have to do this.”

What kind of music did you listen to in the home?

It was everything.   I mean it was predominantly classical with both parents being classically trained and working in the classical world.  My Mom’s a singer and my Dad’s was in a quartet and played on soundtracks.  And I started cello when I was 3.  So a lot of classical, but as every parent is, they are also huge Beatles fans.  We listened to the Beatles and the Beach Boys and, you know, on trips going to the seaside and stuff.  So it was everything.  And I’ve got an older sister as well so when she was a teenager, she was listening to all sorts of grunge music and Iindie music.  And that all filtered down to me.  Yeah.  It was everything, really, which you need to have in film music.  You need to have everything.

Was it recorded in England?

Yeah.  We went over to London to record the orchestra which was great because I got to hang out with my Dad for four days.  Normally when I go back to London, I’m working and I don’t get to see my family.  But my Dad is the only one I get to see because he’s always in the sessions with me so it’s really nice to have it in the family like that.  It’s great.  And the guys over there, they’re unbelievable musicians.  I mean some of the stuff in this score you can probably hear is quite tricky.  Hard and it’s all over the place, and epic, and big.

Do you have a favorite all time film score?

I absolutely love Alan Silvestri’s “Back to the Future.”  I still think its theme is just perfect.  It’s one of those things that you can just put with anything and it just worked.  If I could choose a moment of filmmaking married with music, I think I’d choose the last 15 minutes of E.T. John Williams.  It is just incredible and also because of the whole story behind it.  It’s one of the very few times that picture has been cut up to music rather than the other way around.  They were recording the score of E.T. and he couldn’t quite get the performance he wanted so in the end, Spielberg said “You just record it how you want it done and I’ll cut the picture with the music.” It’s just a perfect performance and it’s just so perfect for the end for that moment in the movie.  When that track comes on my iPod or whatever, I can be in the bus and I’d get off the bus, absolutely in flood with tears.  I think if I have to choose, that would be the moment that I’d choose.

 

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Composers Interview Music

Bad Movie/Good Soundtrack — IndieWire’s Critic Survey

Posted on October 30, 2013 at 8:00 am

I always enjoy IndieWire’s critics surveys and this is an especially good question: What is your favorite example of a bad movie with a great soundtrack?  I was not surprised to find Elizabethtown mentioned by Alissa Wilkenson of Christianity Today.  I would call Cameron Crowe’s movie more a mess than a complete failure, but as is clear from the autobiographical “Almost Famous,” he got his start writing about music and his soundtracks are always terrific.  I enjoyed Mike McGranagan‘s praise for the “Twilight” soundtracks and the thoughts of my friend Dan Kois:

I barely remember anything about Until the End of the World, Wim Wenders’ sort-of road movie, sort-of spy thriller, sort-of apocalypse sci-fi. I remember being really, really disappointed by it when I saw it my senior year in high school. But oh, wow, the soundtrack, which served as rich mixtape fodder that same year: crucial unreleased tracks by R.E.M. and Talking Heads; Elvis Costello doing the Kinks; grim and great Lou Reed, k.d. lang, and Depeche Mode songs; and my first introduction to CAN, Patti Smith, and Nick Cave. Plus that Achtung Baby song, before I got sick of everything on Achtung Baby.

There’s a difference between a soundtrack (that can include songs) and a score.  Two movies that are not terrible but not great with outstanding song-based soundtracks are “Boys on the Side” and “Leap of Faith.”  My favorite songs from those movies include:

 

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